A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets. The contact structure is formed of a contactor carrier and a plurality of contactors attached to a contactor adapter. The contactor adapter is inserted in a slot of the contactor carrier, thereby locking the contactors on the contactor carrier. The contactor has an upper end having a cut-out to engage fit in contactor adapter, a lower end oriented in a direction opposite to the upper end and functions as a contact point for electrical connection with a contact target, and a diagonal portion provided between the upper end and the lower end to function as a spring.
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13. A probe contact assembly for establishing electrical connection with contact targets, comprising:
a contactor carrier having a contactor adapter inserted in a slot where a plurality of contactors are mounted on the contactor adapter; a probe card for mounting the contactor carrier and establishing electrical communication between the contactors and electrodes provided on the probe card; and a pin block having a plurality of contact pins to interface between the probe card and a semiconductor test system when the pin block is attached to the probe card; wherein each of the contactors is comprised of an upper end oriented in a vertical direction and has the cut-out for being fitted in the groove on the contactor adapter, a lower end oriented in a direction opposite to the upper end and functions as a contact point for electrical connection with a contact target, and a diagonal portion provided between the upper end and the lower end to function as a spring and wherein said cut-out creates a recess on the contactor with a length equal to a thickness of said contactor adapter so that an inner wall of the groove of the contactor adapter fits in said cut-out.
1. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets, comprising:
a plurality of contactors made of conductive material where each of the contactors is comprised of an upper end oriented in a vertical direction and has a cut-out for achieving a lock mechanism, a lower end oriented in a direction opposite to the upper end and functions as a contact point for electrical connection with a contact target, and a diagonal portion provided between the upper end and the lower end to function as a spring; a contactor adapter having a plurality of grooves running in a direction vertical with a surface thereof for mounting the contactors on the contactor adapter; and a contactor carrier having a slot for mounting the plurality of contactors when the contactor adapter having the contactors is inserted therein; wherein said cut-out creates a recess on the contactor with a length equal to a thickness of said contactor adapter so that an inner wall of the groove of the contactor adapter fits in said cut-out, and wherein said upper end of each contactor is projected from said upper surface of said contactor carrier and said lower end of each contactor is projected from said lower surface of said contactor carrier.
9. A method for producing a contact structure, comprising the following steps of:
(a) forming a sacrificial layer on a surface of a base substrate; (b) forming a photoresist layer on the sacrificial layer; (c) aligning a photo mask over the photoresist layer and exposing the photoresist layer through the photo mask, the photo mask including an image of the contactors; (d) developing patterns of the image of the contactors on a surface of the photoresist layer; (e) forming the contactors made of conductive material in the patterns on the photoresist layer by depositing the conductive material, each of the contactors having an upper end with a cut-out for achieving a lock mechanism, a lower end oriented in a direction opposite to the upper end to function as a contact point, and a diagonal beam portion provided between the upper end and the lower end to function as a spring; (f) stripping the photoresist layer off; (g) removing the sacrificial layer so that the contactors are separated from the base substrate; (h) attaching the contactors to a contactor adapter having grooves thereon wherein said cut-out creates a recess on the contactor with a length equal to a thickness of said contactor adapter so that an inner wall of the groove of the contactor adapter fits in said cut-out; and (i) mounting the contactor adapter having the contactors on a contactor carrier by inserting the contactor adapter in a slot on the contactor carrier, thereby forming the lock mechanism.
12. A method for producing a contact structure, comprising the following steps of:
(a) forming an conductive substrate made of electric conductive material on a base substrate; (b) forming a photoresist layer on the conductive substrate; (c) aligning a photo mask over the photoresist layer and exposing the photoresist layer through the photo mask, the photo mask including an image of the contactors; (d) developing patterns of the image of the contactors on a surface of the photoresist layer; (e) forming the contactors made of conductive material in the patterns on the photoresist layer by depositing the conductive material, wherein each of the contactors having an upper end with a cut-out for achieving a lock mechanism, a lower end oriented in a direction opposite to the upper end to function as a contact point, and a diagonal beam portion provided between the upper end and the lower end to function as a spring; (f) stripping off the photoresist layer; (g) peeling the conductive substrate having contactors thereon from the base substrate; (h) placing an adhesive tape on the contactors on the conductive substrate so that upper surfaces of the contactors adhere to the adhesive tape wherein adhesive strength between the contactors and the adhesive tape is larger than that between the contactors and the conductive substrate; (i) peeling the conductive substrate so that the contactors on the adhesive tape are separated from the conductive substrate; (j) attaching the contactors to a contactor adapter having grooves thereon wherein said cut-out creates a recess on the contactor with a length equal to a thickness of said contactor adapter so that an inner wall of the groove of the contactor adapter fits in said cut-out; and (k) mounting the contactor adapter having the contactors on a contactor carrier by inserting the contactor adapter in a slot on the contactor carrier, thereby forming the lock mechanism.
2. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
3. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
4. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
5. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
6. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
7. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
8. A contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
10. A method for producing a contact structure as defined in
11. A method for producing a contact structure as defined in
14. A probe contact assembly for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
15. A probe contact assembly for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
16. A probe contact assembly for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
17. A probe contact assembly for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
18. A probe contact assembly for establishing electrical connection with contact targets as defined in
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This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application No. 09/733,508 filed Dec. 9, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,471,538, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application No. 09/503,903 filed Feb. 14, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,540,524.
This invention relates to a contact structure and a production method thereof and a probe contact assembly using the contact structure, and more particularly, to a contact structure having a large number of contactors in a vertical direction and to a method for producing such a large number of contactors on a semiconductor wafer in a horizonal direction and removing the contactors from the wafer to be mounted on a substrate in a vertical direction to form the contact structure such as a contact probe assembly, probe card, IC chip, or other contact mechanism.
In testing high density and high speed electrical devices such as LSI and VLSI circuits, a high performance contact structure such as a probe card having a large number of contactors must be used. In other applications, contact structures may be used for IC packages as IC leads.
The present invention is directed to a structure and production process of such contact structures for use in testing and burning-in LSI and VLSI chips, semiconductor wafers and dice, packaged semiconductor devices, printed circuit boards and the like. The present invention can also be applied to other purposes such as forming leads or terminal pins of IC chips, IC packages or other electronic devices. However, for the simplicity and convenience of explanation, the present invention is described mainly with respect to the semiconductor wafer testing.
In the case where semiconductor devices to be tested are in the form of a semiconductor wafer, a semiconductor test system such as an IC tester is usually connected to a substrate handler, such as an automatic wafer prober, to automatically test the semiconductor wafer. Such an example is shown in
On the test head 100, the semiconductor wafer to be tested is provided with test signals generated by the semiconductor test system. The resultant output signals from the semiconductor wafer under test (IC circuits formed on the semiconductor wafer) are transmitted to the semiconductor test system. In the semiconductor test system, the output signals from the wafer are compared with expected data to determine whether the IC circuits on the semiconductor wafer function correctly.
Referring to
A "frog" ring 130 is mounted on the performance board 120 to accurately determine the contact position relative to the substrate handler 400. The frog ring 130 has a large number of contact pins 141, such as ZIF connectors or pogo-pins, connected to contact terminals 121, through coaxial cables 124.
As shown in
Electrodes (contact pads) of the probe card 170 are electrically connected to the contact pins 141 provided on the frog ring 130. The contact pins 141 are also connected to the contact terminals 121 of the performance board 120 through the coaxial cables 124 where each contact terminal 121 is connected to the corresponding printed circuit board 150 of the test head 100. Further, the printed circuit boards 150 are connected to the semiconductor test system through the cable 110 having, for example, several hundreds of inner cables.
Under this arrangement, the probe contactors (needles) 190 contact the surface (contact target) of the semiconductor wafer 300 on the chuck 180 to apply test signals to the semiconductor wafer 300 and receive the resultant output signals from the wafer 300. As noted above, the resultant output signals from the semiconductor wafer 300 under test are compared with the expected data generated by the semiconductor test system to determine whether the IC circuits on the semiconductor wafer 300 performs properly.
Typically, the probe card 170 is structured by a multi-layer of polyimide substrates having ground planes, power planes, signal transmission lines on many layers. As is well known in the art, each of the signal transmission lines is designed to have a characteristic impedance such as 50 ohms by balancing the distributed parameters, i.e., dielectric constant and magnetic permeability of the polyimide, inductances and capacitances of the signal paths within the probe card 170. Thus, the signal lines are impedance matched establishing a high frequency transmission bandwidth to the wafer 300 for supplying currents in a steady state as well as high current peaks generated by the device's outputs switching in a transient state. For removing noise, capacitors 193 and 195 are provided on the probe card between the power and ground planes.
An equivalent circuit of the probe card 170 is shown in FIG. 4. As shown in
Other factors which limit the frequency bandwidth in the probe card 170 reside in the power and ground contactors shown in
Moreover, the capacitors 193 and 195 are provided between the power line and the ground line to secure a proper performance of the device under test by filtering out the noise or surge pulses on the power lines. The capacitors 193 have a relatively large value such as 10 μF and can be disconnected from the power lines by switches if necessary. The capacitors 195 have a relatively small capacitance value such as 0.01 μF and fixedly connected close to the DUT. These capacitors serve the function as high frequency decoupling on the power lines. In other words, the capacitors limit the high frequency performance of the probe contactor.
Accordingly, the most widely used probe contactors as noted above are limited to the frequency bandwidth of approximately 200 MHz which is insufficient to test recent semiconductor devices. In the industry, it is considered that the frequency bandwidth on the order of 1 GHz or higher, will be necessary in the near future. Further, it is desired in the industry that a probe card is capable of handling a large number of semiconductor devices, especially memories, such as 32 or more, in a parallel fashion to increase test throughput.
In the conventional technology, the probe card and probe contactors such as shown in
Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to provide a contact structure having a large number of contactors for electrically contacting with contact targets with high frequency bandwidth, high pin count and contact performance as well as high reliability.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a contact structure formed of a contactor carrier and a plurality of contactors where the contactors are easily and securely mounted on the contactor carrier with use of a contactor adapter.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a contact structure such as a probe card for use in testing semiconductor devices and the like which has a very high frequency bandwidth to meet the test requirements in the next generation semiconductor test technology.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a contact structure to establish electrical connection with a large number of semiconductor devices for testing such semiconductor devices in parallel at the same time.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method for producing a large number of contactors in a two dimensional manner on a silicon substrate, removing the contactors from the substrate and mounting the contactors on a contact substrate in a three dimensional manner to form a contact structure.
In the present invention, a contact structure is formed of a large number of contactors and a contactor carrier. The contactors are produced on a planar surface of a base substrate such as a silicon substrate by a photolithography technology and removed from the substrate and mounted on the contactor carrier. The contact structure of the present invention is advantageously applied to testing and burning-in semiconductor devices, such as LSI and VLSI chips, semiconductor wafers and dice, packaged ICs, printed circuit boards and the like. The contact structure of the present invention can also be used as components of electronics devices such as IC leads and pins.
The first aspect of the present invention is a contact structure for establishing electrical connection with contact targets. The contact structure is formed of a contactor carrier and a plurality of contactors. The contactors are mounted on the contactor carrier through a contactor adapter. The contactor has an upper end oriented in a vertical direction, a lower end which functions as a contact point for electrical connection with a contact target, a diagonal beam portion provided between the upper end and the lower end to function as a spring.
Another aspect of the present invention is a method of producing the contactors in a two dimensional manner on a silicon substrate and removing therefrom for establishing a contact structure. The production method is comprised of the following steps of:
(a) forming a sacrificial layer on a surface of a silicon substrate;
(b) forming a photoresist layer on the sacrificial layer;
(c) aligning a photo mask over the photoresist layer and exposing the photoresist layer with ultraviolet light through the photo mask, the photo mask including an image of the contactors;
(d) developing patterns of the image of the contactors on a surface of the photoresist layer;
(e) forming the contactors made of conductive material in the patterns on the photoresist layer by depositing the conductive material, each of the contactors having an upper end with a cut-out for fitting in a contactor adapter, a lower end to function as a contact point, and a diagonal beam provided between the upper end and the lower end to function as a spring;
(f) stripping the photoresist layer off;
(g) removing the sacrificial layer by an etching process so that the contactors are separated from the silicon substrate; and
(h) fitting the cut-outs of the contactors in grooves formed on the contactor adapter.
(i) mounting the contactor adapter having the contactors on a contactor carrier through a predetermined slot formed on the contactor carrier.
A further aspect of the present invention is a probe contact assembly including the contact structure of the present invention. The probe contact assembly is formed of a contactor carrier having a plurality of contactors mounted thereon through a contactor adapter, a probe card for mounting the contactor carrier and establishing electrical communication between the contactors and electrodes provided on the probe card, and a pin block having a plurality of contact pins to interface between the probe card and a semiconductor test system when the pin block is attached to the probe card. Each contactor has a structure as described above with respect to the first aspect of the present invention.
According to the present invention, the contact structure has a very high frequency bandwidth to meet the test requirements of the next generation semiconductor technology. The contactors are easily and securely mounted on the contactor carrier with use of the unique mounting structure. Since the large number of contactors are produced at the same time on the substrate without involving manual handling, it is possible to achieve consistent quality, high reliability and long life in the contact performance as well as low cost. Further, because the contactors are assembled on the same substrate material as that of the device under test, it is possible to compensate positional errors caused by temperature changes.
Further, according to the present invention, the production process is able to produce a large number of contactors in a horizontal direction on the silicon substrate by using relatively simple technique. Such contactors are removed from the substrate and mounted on a contact substrate in a vertical direction then assembled by simply inserting the middle portion into the carrier. The contact structure produced by the present invention is low cost and has high efficiency while achieving high mechanical strength and reliability.
The present invention will now be explained in detail with reference to
The contactor carrier 20 and the contactor adapter 25 are made of silicon or dielectric material such as polyimide, ceramic and glass. The contactors 30 are made of conductive material or coated with conductive material. Two or more contactors 30 are attached to the contactor adapter 25 and the contactor adapter 25 is attached to the contactor carrier 20. Two or more contactor adapters 25 each carrying a plurality of contactors 30 are attached to the contactor carrier 20, more details of which will be described later with reference to
In
The diagonal portion 32 diagonally extends from the upper end 33 to the lower end 35. The upper end 33 and the lower end 35 function as contact points to establish electrical communication with other components. In the semiconductor test application, the upper end 33 functions to contact with a probe card of the test system and the lower end 35 functions to contact with a contact target such as the contact pad 320 on the semiconductor wafer 300.
As noted above, the contactors 30 are mounted on the contactor carrier 20 via the contactor adapter 25. The upper end 33 and the lower end 35 are respectively projected from the upper surface and the lower surface of the contactor adapter 25. The diagonal (spring) portion 32 of the contactor 30 functions as a spring to produce a resilient force when the lower end 35 is pressed against the contact target such as the contact pad 320. The lower end (contact point) 35 of the contactor 30 is preferably sharpened to be able to scrub the surface of the contact pad 320. The resilient force promotes such a scrubbing effect at the lower end 35 against the surface of contact pad 320. The scrubbing effect promotes an improved contact performance when the contact point 35 scrubs the metal oxide surface layer of the contact pad 320 to electrically contact the conductive material of the contact pad 320 under the metal oxide surface layer.
The contactors 30 produced in the manner shown in
In the example of
Preferably, the diagonal portion 32 has a width and/or thickness smaller than that of the upper end 33 to promote the spring action. Because of the reduced width and of the diagonal portion 32, it can easily deform when the contactor 30 is pressed against the contact target. As noted above with reference to
An adhesion promoter layer 44 is formed on the sacrificial layer 42 as shown in
In the next process, a photoresist layer 48 is formed on the conductive layer 46 over which a photo mask 50 is precisely aligned to be exposed with ultraviolet (UV) light as shown in FIG. 8D. The photo mask 50 shows a two dimensional image of the contactor 30 which will be developed on the photoresist layer 48. As is well known in the art, positive as well as negative photoresist can be used for this purpose. If a positive acting resist is used, the photoresist covered by the opaque portions of the mask 50 hardens (cure) after the exposure. Examples of photoresist material include Novolak (M-Cresol-formaldehyde), PMMA (Poly Methyl Methacrylate), SU-8 and photo sensitive polyimide. In the development process, the exposed part of the resist can be dissolved and washed away, leaving a photoresist layer 48 of
In the photolithography process in the foregoing, instead of the UV light, it is also possible to expose the photoresist layer 48 with an electron beam or X-rays as is known in the art. Further, it is also possible to directly write the image of the contact structure on the photoresist layer 48 by exposing the photoresist 48 with a direct write electron beam, X-ray or light source (laser).
The conductive material such as copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), aluminum (Al), rhodium (Rh), palladium (Pd), tungsten (W) or other metal, nickel-cobalt (NiCo) or other alloy combinations thereof is deposited (electroplated) in the pattern "A" of the photoresist layer 48 to form the contactor 30 as shown in FIG. 8G. Preferably, a contact material which is different from that of the conductive layer 46 should be used to differentiate etching characteristics from one another as will be described later. The over plated portion of the contactor 30 in
The above noted process may be repeated for producing contactors having different thickness by forming two or more conductive layers. For example, a certain portion of the contactor 30 may be designed to have a thickness larger than that of the other portions. In such a case, after forming a first layer of the contactors (conductive material), if necessary, the processes of
In the next process, the photoresist layer 48 is removed in a resist stripping process as shown in FIG. 8I. Typically, the photoresist layer 48 is removed by wet chemical processing. Other examples of stripping are acetone-based stripping and plasma O2 stripping. In
The etching condition can be selected to etch the layers 44 and 46 but not to etch the contactor 30. In other words, to etch the conductive layer 46 without etching the contactor 30, as noted above, the conductive material used for the contactor 30 must be different from the material of the conductive layer 46. Finally, the contactor 30 is separated from any other materials as shown in the perspective view of FIG. 8L. Although the production process in
In the process shown in
As noted above, in order to etch the conductive layer 46 without etching the contactor 30, the conductive material used for the contactor 30 must be different from the material of the conductive layer. Although the production process in
In the next process in
In the development process, the exposed part of the resist can be dissolved and washed away, leaving a photoresist layer 348 of
In the case where the contactor has two or more different thickness, the above noted process may be repeated for producing the contactor by forming two or more conductive layers. Namely, after forming a first layer of the contactors, if necessary, the processes of
In the next process, the photoresist layer 348 is removed in a resist stripping process as shown in FIG. 10H. In
In this example, the pick and place mechanism 80 is comprised of a transfer mechanism 84 to pick and place the contactors 30, mobile arms 86 and 87 to allow movements of the transfer mechanism 84 in X, Y and Z directions, tables 81 and 82 whose positions are adjustable in X, Y and Z directions, and a monitor camera 78 having, for example, a CCD image sensor therein. The transfer mechanism 84 includes a suction arm 85 that performs suction (pick operation) and suction release (place operation) operations for the contactors 30. The suction force is created, for example, by a negative pressure such as vacuum. The suction arm 85 rotates in a predetermined angle such as 90 degrees.
In operation, the adhesive tape 90 having the contactors 30 and the contactor adapter 25 having the grooves 27 (
The contactor adapter 25 is provided with grooves 27 and an adapter stopper 26 as shown in FIG. 12B. The cut-outs 39 of the contactor 30 and the grooves 27 of the contactor adapter 25 are produced so that they will snugly fit to one another. Namely, the width and thickness of the cut-outs 39 of the contactor 30 are made identical to the width and thickness of the groove 27 on the contactor adapter 25. Further, the distance between the upper end 33 and the stopper 38 of the contactor, i.e., the length of the cut-out 39, is made identical to the thickness of the contactor adapter 25. The contactor adapter 25 has an adapter stopper (step) 26 for mounting the contactor adapter 25 in the contactor carrier 20.
In
In
The contact structure is configured by a plurality of contactors 30 mounted on the contactor carrier 20. The upper end (base portion) 33 of each of the contactors 30 is projected at the upper surface of the contactor carrier 20. The lower end (contact portion) 35 is projected from the lower surface of the contactor carrier 20. The contactors 30 are inserted in the slots 24 on the contactor carrier 20 via the contactor adapter 25. As noted above, the diagonal (spring) portion 32 extends in a diagonal direction between the upper end 33 and the lower end 35. The diagonal portion 32 produces a resilient force when pressed against the semiconductor wafer 300.
The probe card 260, pogo-pin block 130 and contact structure are mechanically as well as electronically connected with one another, thereby forming a probe contact assembly. Thus, electrical paths are created from the contact point of the contactors 30 to the test head 100 through the cables 124 and performance board 120 (FIG. 2). Thus, when the semiconductor wafer 300 and the probe contact assembly are pressed with each other, electrical communication will be established between the DUT (contact pads 320 on the wafer 300) and the test system.
The pogo-pin block (frog ring) 130 is equivalent to the one shown in
When assembled, the upper ends 33 of the contactors 30 contact the electrodes 262. The electrodes 262 and 265 are connected through interconnect traces 263 to fan-out the pitch of the contact structure to meet the pitch of the pogo-pins in the pogo-pin block 130. Because the contactors 30 mounted on the contactor carrier 20 have the diagonal portions 32, the contactors 30 deform easily and produce resilient contact forces toward the contact pads 320 when pressed against the semiconductor wafer 300.
The conductive elastomer 250 is provided between the contact structure and the probe card 260. When assembled, the upper ends 33 of the contactors 30 contact the conductive elastomer 250. The conductive elastomer 250 is an elastic sheet having a large number of conductive wires in a vertical direction. For example, the conductive elastomer 250 is comprised of a silicon rubber sheet and a multiple rows of metal filaments. The metal filaments (wires) are provided in the vertical direction of
According to the present invention, the contact structure has a very high frequency bandwidth to meet the test requirements of next generation semiconductor technology. The contact structure is formed easily and securely by mounting the contactors on the contactor carrier through the contactor adapter. Since the large number of contactors are produced at the same time on the substrate without involving manual handling, it is possible to achieve consistent quality, high reliability and long life in the contact performance.
Although only a preferred embodiment is specifically illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated that many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings and within the purview of the appended claims without departing the spirit and intended scope of the invention.
Aldaz, Robert Edward, Zhou, Yu, Yu, David, Khoury, Theodore A.
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